The Government Restrictions Index is based on 20 questions used by
the Pew Forum to assess whether governments - including at the local or
provincial level - restrict religious practices or beliefs. The
questions are intended to gauge the extent to which governments try to
control religious groups or individuals, prohibit conversions from one
faith to another, limit preaching and proselytizing, or otherwise
hinder religious affiliation by means such as registration requirements
and fines. The questions seek to capture both relatively
straightforward efforts to restrict religion - for example, through a
nation's constitution and laws - as well as efforts that are more
indirect, such as favoring certain religions by means of preferential
funding.
Because no single type of restriction is a reliable indicator of the
overall level of restrictions in a country, the study covers a wide
array of possible restrictions. But because some government actions
have less impact than others on people's lives, several of the
questions allow for gradations or contain multiple sub-questions. This
effectively gives some restrictions (such as favoritism in funding
religious buildings and schools) less weight in the index than others
(such as physical violence toward religious minorities). The questions
are shown in the Summary of Results; detail on how all 198 countries and territories scored on each question is available in the Results by Country.
The mathematical presentation of these scores needs to be kept in
context. If the Government Restrictions Index were based on 15
well-chosen questions instead of 20, for example, some countries'
scores would change, and even the order in which the countries appear
on the index might shift in small ways. The Pew Forum has deliberately
chosen not to attach numerical rankings from No. 1 to No. 198 both
because there are many tie scores and because the differences between
the scores of countries that are close to each other on the index may
not be important. This is particularly the case at the low end of the
scale, where most countries are clustered. By contrast, the numerical
differences at the top end of the scale, among the relatively small
number of countries with very high restrictions, are more meaningful.
(See the Methodology.)
The most meaningful comparisons, however, are between broad ranges
that reflect observable differences in real-world behavior.
Accordingly, the Government Restrictions Index is divided into four
ranges: very high (the top 5% of scores), high (the next highest 15% of
scores), moderate (the next 20% of scores) and low (the bottom 60% of
scores).
Countries with very high government restrictions have
intensive restrictions on many or all of the 20 measures. In Brunei,
for example, a 2005 law requires all religious groups other than the
official Shafii sect of Islam to register with the government and to
provide the names of their members. In addition, authorities in Brunei
enforce religious norms, including arresting people for being in too
close proximity to the opposite sex. Although conversion is technically
legal, permission is required from Brunei's Ministry of Religious
Affairs before converting from Islam to any other faith.
Countries with high government restrictions have intensive
restrictions on several of the 20 measures, or more moderate
restrictions on many of them. For example, in Greece, the government
allows only Orthodox Christian, Jewish and Muslim organizations to own,
bequeath and inherit property as well as to have an official legal
identity as a religion. Other religious groups, including other
Christians, thus operate at a disadvantage.
Countries with moderate government restrictions have
intensive restrictions on a few measures, or more moderate restrictions
on several of them. Cambodia, for example, has a Ministry of Cults and
Religions that has repeatedly prohibited Christians from going
door-to-door to talk about their faith or pass out religious
literature, and the government gives preferential treatment to
Buddhism, the state religion. In France, proponents of a 2004 law
banning the wearing of religious symbols in schools say it protects
Muslim girls from being forced to wear a headscarf, but the law also
restricts those who want to wear headscarves - or any other
"conspicuous" religious symbol, including large Christian crosses and
Sikh turbans - as an expression of their faith.
Countries with low government restrictions generally have
moderate restrictions on few or none of the measures. In the United
Kingdom, for instance, the head of state is also the head of the Church
of England, yet the government does not always favor the officially
established church. For example, during the period covered by this
study, a British court allowed employers to require Christians to hide
their religious symbols in the workplace while not requiring the same
of other faiths.
Patterns in Government Restrictions
An analysis of the data shows that government restrictions on
religion are high or very high in 43 countries, about one-in-five. But
because many of these are populous countries (including China, India
and Pakistan), more than half (57%) of the world's population lives
with high or very high government restrictions on religion. A much
larger number of countries - 119 - have low levels of government
restrictions. But many fewer people, about one-in-four (26%), live in
these countries.
As the results clearly show, it is not sufficient simply to look at
formal constitutional protections when gauging the level of government
restrictions on religion. Most (76%) of the 198 countries and
territories included in the study call for freedom of religion in their
constitutions or basic laws, and an additional 20% protect some
religious practices. But the study found that only 53 governments (27%)
fully respected the religious rights written into their laws.
Afghanistan's Constitution, for instance, appears to protect its
citizens' right to choose and practice a religion other than Islam,
stating that "followers of other religions are free to perform their
religious rites within the limits of the provisions of law." The
Constitution qualifies that measure of protection, however, by
stipulating that "no law can be contrary to the sacred religion of
Islam" and instructing judges to rule according to Shariah law if no
specific Afghan law applies to a case. In 2006, for example, an Afghan
citizen, Abdul Rahman, was tried and sentenced to death in accordance
with several judges' interpretation of Shariah law for converting from
Islam to another religion. Rahman eventually was granted asylum in
Italy. (Overall, Afghanistan ranks high in government restrictions.)

It is also important to look carefully at government policies that
on the surface appear to be neutral but in practice serve to restrict
religion. For example, 178 countries (90%) require religious groups to
register with the government for one purpose or another, such as to
obtain tax-exempt status or import privileges. Further analysis shows,
however, that in almost three-in-five countries (59%), these
registration requirements result in major problems for (19%) or
outright discrimination against (40%) certain religious groups.
Singapore's Societies Act, for example, requires all religious groups
to register with the government. In 1972, the government de-registered
the Jehovah's Witnesses, and in 1982 it de-registered the Unification
Church, effectively criminalizing the practice of those religions.
(Singapore ranks high in government restrictions.)
Similarly, the vast majority of governments (86%) provide funding or
other resources to religious groups. But in 151 countries (76%),
governments provide this assistance in ways that are either clearly
imbalanced or that favor only one religious group. For example, in
Canada - which ranks low in government restrictions - six of the 10
provinces provide some level of funding for religious schools, but in
Ontario, only Catholic education is funded. It is important to note
that government support for religious groups is considered a
restriction in this study only if it involves preferential treatment of
some group(s) and discrimination against others. (See Summary of Results, GRI Question No. 20.3.)
Other government restrictions are much more obvious. Nearly half of
all countries either restrict the activities of foreign missionaries
(41%) or prohibit them altogether (6%). In addition, national or local
governments in 75 countries (38%) limit efforts by some or all
religious groups to persuade people to join their faith. In Indonesia,
for example, the government's Guidelines for the Propagation of
Religion bar most proselytizing, and Article 156 of the Criminal Code
makes spreading heresy and blasphemy punishable by up to five years in
prison. (Indonesia ranks high in government restrictions.)
During the main period covered by this study, from mid-2006 to
mid-2008, the governments in 137 countries (69%) harassed or attempted
to intimidate certain religious groups, and in 91 countries (46%) there
were reported cases of the use of physical force against religious
individuals or groups by governments or government employees. Police in
Eritrea, for example, detained some adherents of unregistered churches
and compelled them to renounce their faith and join the Orthodox
Christian Church in order to win release. And in Burma (Myanmar), the
government actively enticed Muslims and Christians to convert to
Buddhism. (Both Eritrea and Burma are in the very high category for
government restrictions.)

Among the other countries with very high levels of government
restrictions on religion are several that are frequently cited for the
limits they impose on minority faiths. These include Saudi Arabia and
Iran, the two most restrictive governments according to the Pew Forum's
analysis of the 16 published sources; both enforce strict
interpretations of Islamic law. China is in the highest category
primarily because of its restrictions on Buddhism in Tibet, its ban on
the Falun Gong movement throughout the country, its strict controls on
the practice of religion among Uighur Muslims and its pressure on
religious groups that are not registered by the government, including
Christians who worship in private homes. The primary sources for this
study report numerous cases of imprisonment, beatings and torture of
members of these religious groups by Chinese authorities.

But the list of countries with high restrictions also contains some
that are widely seen as democratic, such as Turkey and Israel. Israel's
score is driven up by security policies that sometimes have the effect
of limiting access to religious sites, and by its preferential
treatment of Orthodox Jews. The government recognizes only Orthodox
Jewish religious authorities in some personal status matters (such as
marriage) concerning Jews and devotes the bulk of state funds provided
for religion to Orthodox Jews, even though they make up only a small
portion of all Jews in Israel. Among the factors in Turkey's score is
that millions of Alevi Muslims, a minority whose beliefs and practices
differ in significant ways from Sunni Islam, are required to receive
Sunni Muslim religious instruction in state schools. During the period
studied, Alevis had numerous court cases pending against the Ministry
of Education regarding forced religious instruction.
For the purposes of this study, actions by local officials were
considered restrictions even if they were contrary to national policy,
as long as those actions remained in force and were not contravened by
national officials during the period covered by the study. For
instance, although Indonesia's national government does not apply
Islamic law across the country, religious police in several districts
of Aceh province enforced the wearing of Islamic attire and required
restaurants to close in the daytime during the holy month of Ramadan;
national authorities did not intervene.
View the Government Restrictions Index Table.
Government Restrictions by Region
There are major differences among regions as well as among countries
when it comes to government restrictions on religion. On average,
restrictions are highest in the Middle East-North Africa, where the
median score for the 20 countries (4.9) is considerably higher than for
the 35 countries in the Americas (1.0), the region with the lowest
median score.

The 51 Asian and Pacific countries have a median score in the middle
range (3.3), but this masks enormous variability within this large
region. Several of the more populous Asian and Pacific countries have
high levels of government restrictions. Indeed, the nearly 20 countries
in the region with very high or high government restrictions on
religion - including Iran, Uzbekistan, China, Burma, Malaysia,
Indonesia, Pakistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Vietnam and
India - account for more than half of the world's population. On the
other hand, some of the least restrictive governments are also found in
the Asia-Pacific region; these include Japan, Taiwan and Australia.

Perhaps surprisingly, given its many laws and conventions promoting
the protection of human rights, Europe has a median score (1.9) that is
slightly higher than sub-Saharan Africa's (1.4) and the Americas'
(1.0). The relatively high government restrictions score for Europe's
45 countries is due in part to former Communist countries, such as
Russia, which have replaced state atheism with state-favored religions
that are accorded special protections or privileges. Most of the
European countries with high or very high restrictions - including
Belarus, Russia and Bulgaria, all of which score above 4.5 - are in the
East. But a number of countries in Western Europe also have scores
above the region's median. They include Germany, France and Austria,
which have laws aimed at protecting citizens from what the government
considers dangerous cults or sects.
The median level of government restrictions on religion in
sub-Saharan Africa is the next-to-lowest of the world's five major
regions. Among the governments with low restrictions on religion are
South Africa, Namibia, Benin, Sierra Leone, Senegal and the Republic of
Congo. This may be somewhat surprising, given the social and political
unrest that some of these countries have experienced, but religion
generally has not been a major factor in the unrest. At the same time,
a few sub-Saharan countries, including Mauritania and Eritrea, have
high or very high restrictions on religion. Because Somalia did not
have an effective national government during the period of this study,
its score at the bottom of the high range on the Government
Restrictions Index reflects only the actions of local authorities and
thus may be incomplete; Somalia's ranking in the very high range of the
Social Hostilities Index may more accurately reflect the actual
situation in the country.
Of the five regions, the Americas have the lowest median level of
government restrictions on religion. One country, Cuba, has a
restriction score higher than 4.4. But only three others have scores
higher than 2.0 - Mexico, Venezuela and Colombia. While Canada, the
United States and Brazil all have relatively low government
restrictions on religion, social hostilities are somewhat higher in the
United States than in the other two, as will be discussed in the next
section.
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